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a different view of bridge

#1 User is offline   sceptic 

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Posted 2006-November-12, 05:45

Why does it matter if someone makes a mistake at a club and they decide not to call the director, I may be wrong but surely at a club on certain nights it is social bridge (albeit duplicate so there is some structure to it)

Why do people care more about the rules of bridge than they seem to about how badly they bid, play or defend

Why when (I may be wrong but this is my perception) someone decides to play bridge with limited, time and access to a teacher, everyone else assumes that they should take the time to learn the naunces of the rules, surely the EBU and ACBL etc , can come up with a set of rules for social play at a club and the expert competitive play can stick to the complex rigid very hard to understand for the lay person set of rules that prosper in their environment

each to their own I say, social bridge and club play is not the same as competitive bridge and many people seem to confuse the two

and for that reason alone I think that fred is doing the right thing in segregating the lounges.

It seems to me that the rule mongers amongst you, do not realise that you make the game as unpleasant for social bridgeplayers and the amateurs who do not understand or do not stick to the rules make it frustraating for you, I am not defending one side or the other, but if you play in areas of mixed abilities then you should expect this to happen and you should not debate it as it is one of lifes unanswerables and you are wasting your time because I assume since EBU and ACBL etc inception, this has been argued over and over again.

Tolerance or segregation is the key

Social Bridge verses Competitive Bridge take your choice you cant mix them both as you will never please everyone
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#2 User is offline   Codo 

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Posted 2006-November-12, 07:18

HI Wayne

you are right, their is a big gap between social bridge and competetive bridge.

But the problem is not, that the competetive players like to have TDs ruling and like to enforce the rules. The problem is, that social players wants to play competetive but without following the rules.
Noone will ever enforce a TD to a private rubber bridge table. If you play there, you accept, that AUnt Minnie always shakes her head if her trump support is not sufficent and that uncle Louis is yelling "Double" for penalty and "double??" for take out. Accept it or leave.
But when these two try to compete in a club or a tournement, they have to follow the rules as much as you and I have to.

They don´t do so and I am quite frustrated about this, because it takes quite some time to explain them, why calling a TD is not the same as calling them cheaters.

But I must accept, that in the club, there are more and more social players. They are the overwhelming majority. So the good players leave the club one after the other and play online.

Just like you said: Segregation.

This is surely the wrong way, but there is no other.
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Roland


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#3 User is offline   sceptic 

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Posted 2006-November-12, 07:51

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But I must accept, that in the club, there are more and more social players. They are the overwhelming majority. So the good players leave the club one after the other and play online.


so what happened 15 years ago when there was no online bridge to run to and bridge was more popular than it is now, is there a link, is the internet is killing bridge?
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#4 User is offline   jillybean 

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Posted 2006-November-12, 08:53

When we play monopoly I teach my daughter that she can only take the amount of money from the bank that is rightfully hers. When we play UNO I teach her that she cannot go through the pack and take out ‘pick up 4’ cards and that she must play in turn. Rules make the game, change the rules and you are playing a different game.

Why is separating the players who want to play in strict accordance with the rules of bridge and the players who want to play with relaxed rules a bad thing? It happens all the time in life, I think the problems occur when it is not clear which game is being played and people have different expectations

jb
"And no matter what methods you play, it is essential, for anyone aspiring to learn to be a good player, to learn the importance of bidding shape properly." MikeH
“Let me put it in words you might understand,” he said. “Mr. Trump, f–k off!” Anders Vistisen
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#5 User is offline   pbleighton 

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Posted 2006-November-12, 09:20

"But I must accept, that in the club, there are more and more social players. They are the overwhelming majority. So the good players leave the club one after the other and play online."

Actually, where I play, many of them are getting too old to play or die.

It seems to me that good ftf bridge club games will be mostly gone in 10-15 years. I'm not sure whether there will be good (organized) online games to replace them.

As to the social/competitive split, I'm somewhat in the middle on this. I think:
1. Duplicate bridge needs rules,
2. There is a case that the rules could be somewhat relaxed, and
3. The behavior of some experienced players towards infractions of rules (or partner mistakes, etc) is terrible, and drives players (not just inexperienced players) away from ftf bridge in droves.

Peter
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#6 User is offline   hrothgar 

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Posted 2006-November-12, 09:44

pbleighton, on Nov 12 2006, 06:20 PM, said:

It seems to me that good ftf bridge club games will be mostly gone in 10-15 years. I'm not sure whether there will be good (organized) online games to replace them.

Population density might have a significant impact...

I'd be surprised if it wasn't possible to sustain a decent game in a cities like New York or London. Large Universities still have bridge clubs, even though the popularity of the game has collapsed amongst younger people. However, if you squeeze 20,000+ people into the same small area you're typically able to find a reasonable number of card players.

I do believe that FTF clubs will need to adapt to survive. When I played club bridge, the main attraction was not the actual game, it was socializing with folks after the game. There is a good local bridge club 20 minutes drive from me that I don't bother going to... Its not system regs that keeps me from making the drive - I can play anything I want in the clubs - rather, there's no one my own age to go drinking with and discuss hands after the game.

As for online bridge, I'm not sure whether players value formal structure and organization or not.
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#7 User is offline   mike777 

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Posted 2006-November-12, 12:59

sceptic, on Nov 12 2006, 08:51 AM, said:

Quote

But I must accept, that in the club, there are more and more social players. They are the overwhelming majority. So the good players leave the club one after the other and play online.


so what happened 15 years ago when there was no online bridge to run to and bridge was more popular than it is now, is there a link, is the internet is killing bridge?

I think bridge is more popular and more played now than 15 years ago. Maybe only a fraction more but still more.

1 million players played in acbl online games in the last 12 months. Granted this was not 1 millon seperate players but includes someone playing multiple times in different events but still.


I would expect in a few years more online sanctioned games worldwide than played face to face worldwide
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#8 User is offline   Echognome 

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Posted 2006-November-12, 14:25

I find this to be an interesting topic. When I first started to take the game more seriously, I spent a lot of time reading through the rules (not so much the laws, but the Orange book which regulates conventions). I made sure that all of our bidding was legal at the appropriate level (and let's face it, only a handful of people would ever notice). And I made a conscious effort to learn to play the game fairly.

Then I had a lot of problems in the first club I played in. I felt opponents were taking advantage of the rules all the time. I used to call the TD when I felt something was untoward and this upset my opponents. I no longer play at that club, and I also do not call the TD nearly as often. My dilemma is whether we should try to educate the rank and file about the rules or let them carry on their happy way and not be bothered.

Here are some of a myriad of things that has happened to me in f2f bridge. Tell me which of these you'd be ok with and which would make you unhappy? Do you think we should be relaxed about the rules?

I open 1 playing Precision, partner alerts, and LHO says "Does that promise any diamonds?" and passes. We end up in some contract and RHO makes the inevitable lead from an unclear holding.

I open 1, partner alerts, RHO(!) grabs my convention card from underneath my scorecard knocking over my pen and scorecard. LHO doesn't on his 3=3=4=3 11 count and the opponents find 3 for a top.

In third seat I open 3 on a 2=2=3=6 11 count. LHO aks "Is that a normal preempt?" and passes. His partner then balances on a 2=3=5=3 8 count and this works out when they end up in 3 of North's major.

In third seat NV, partner opens 1NT. RHO grabs the convention card and says "8-14? You play 8-14?" (I nod.) "Partner, did you hear that? They play 8-14 in 3rd NV." Then he passes! I pass and LHO reopens the bidding with a double.

My partner is playing in 6 with AQxxxx opposite JTxxx as trumps (i.e. an 11 card fit). He leads from the J and the next player takes one card out, replaces it in his hand, then produces a small diamond! My partner, not unreasonably, plays small and then loses to the stiff K offside.

My partner and I have a long relay auction bidding every suit along the way (but neither opponent doubling). South is about to declare and before East's final pass he asks about one particular suit bid (note they were all artificial). Gets his explanation and then passes. West leads that suit.

I could go on and on, but these are the types of occurrences that I suspect annoy some of those "rules sticklers" in the club. By the way, on some of these we had the TD over and got adjustments. I'm also sure that any number of forum posters could give similar stories.

Should we be relaxed about such occurrences? Or should we educate them about the rules (in a friendly way)?
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#9 User is offline   sceptic 

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Posted 2006-November-12, 18:26

ok comments on first one

Quote

I open 1♦ playing Precision, partner alerts, and LHO says "Does that promise any diamonds?" and passes. We end up in some contract and RHO makes the inevitable ♦ lead from an unclear holding.


my thoughts would be, what is this idiot doing in a friendly club and he is playing some weird system and I have no idea how to bid against this system (anyone that says you should study the opps cc is crazy, where the hell do you get the time to do that realistically.

I dont mean to be off topic here (I am not sure I am ) but this is the sort of thing that just makes issues and if you explain to me now I would undwerstand, but that is only because I read these forums and talk to people, in a f2f club where the basic level is kitchen bridge, so I am led to believe, I am not suprised you could be frustrated, you obviously want to play at a different level than that of the people at the club where acol could be the main system any of them have learnt and the only one they know and this is where the problems arise, how much study do they need to understand how to play against precision

I will answer all your other points with some different views during the week when I have some more time

one last thought, do you think it would be prudent of the EBU or ACBL etc etc to make all players take a written test about what is allowed at what level during competions only the level they wish to enter and an exam about the alert structure that they will encounter, that way they can be expected to comply and would be less frustrating, if the opinion is no one or not many would be bothered then perhaps we need to look at what the masses want and then try something different

It seems to me that the people that are responsible for the frustration are the governing bodies, they should set the minimum standards for each level of tournament and then this qualifies as a ranking system, so cover the ranking systems with written exams at each level

also another thought would be for more people to do basic TD training so they understand the rules i.e. each member must in their first year do a test paper on the alerting procedure and basic TD functions, this may prove an answer to some of the issues, some of you experts could do basic training or teachings in the BIL lounge to test the waters to see if it makes any difference in online tourneys
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#10 User is offline   sceptic 

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Posted 2006-November-12, 18:43

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I open 1♠, partner alerts, RHO(!) grabs my convention card from underneath my scorecard knocking over my pen and scorecard. LHO doesn't on his 3=3=4=3 11 count and the opponents find 3♠ for a top.



Personally I would have told them they should becareful and act more like adults

I have no idea what the infraction is with the 3 spades making
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Posted 2006-November-12, 18:46

Echognome, on Nov 12 2006, 03:25 PM, said:

My partner is playing in 6 with AQxxxx opposite JTxxx as trumps (i.e. an 11 card fit). He leads from the J and the next player takes one card out, replaces it in his hand, then produces a small diamond! My partner, not unreasonably, plays small and then loses to the stiff K offside.

This made me lol. It is totally unreasonable to hook on that table action.
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#12 User is offline   hrothgar 

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Posted 2006-November-12, 18:54

sceptic, on Nov 13 2006, 03:26 AM, said:

ok comments on first one

Quote

I open 1♦ playing Precision, partner alerts, and LHO says "Does that promise any diamonds?" and passes. We end up in some contract and RHO makes the inevitable ♦ lead from an unclear holding.


my thoughts would be, what is this idiot doing in a friendly club and he is playing some weird system and I have no idea how to bid against this system (anyone that says you should study the opps cc is crazy, where the hell do you get the time to do that realistically.

I have a very different reaction...

There is nothing unfriendly about learning to play a game well and trying to win.
Furthermore, you don't get to cheat to compensate for your lack of preparation.

There's nothing wrong with wanting to play social bridge. Just don't get an illusions that you have some god given right to beat people who are putting more work into this.
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#13 User is offline   sceptic 

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Posted 2006-November-12, 19:03

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There's nothing wrong with wanting to play social bridge. Just don't get an illusions that you have some god given right to beat people who are putting more work into this.


I don't and have never said that, nor do I believe that I have even implied that


Quote

There is nothing unfriendly about learning to play a game well and trying to win.
Furthermore, you don't get to cheat to compensate for your lack of preparation.


I do not believe many people deliberately set out to cheat and I am 100% sure I do not cheat

Answer me this question please, I think it is acceptable for people at a table online here at bbo to talk to their partner to discuss conventions whilst they are playing etc it does not bother me and I think if it went to a general public vote no one else really would have issue with it, so why at a club f2f is this totally unacceptable?
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#14 User is offline   sceptic 

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Posted 2006-November-12, 19:12

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Rules make the game, change the rules and you are playing a different game.


EBU recently changed the alert rules, I expect if you check historically bridge rles in every country have changed since inception, so this statement is not a very valid opinion in my mind (as small as that may be)
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#15 User is offline   hrothgar 

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Posted 2006-November-12, 19:25

sceptic, on Nov 13 2006, 04:03 AM, said:

Answer me this question please, I think it is acceptable for people at a table online here at bbo to talk to their partner to discuss conventions whilst they are playing etc it does not bother me and I think if it went to a general public vote no one else really would have issue with it, so why at a club f2f is this totally unacceptable?

By and large, when folks are playing at a club you are either playing a competitive game or you are playing for money. In either case, I don't think that its unreasonable to expect that the game be played according to the established rule and the rules of the game forbid players to discuss their mehtods at the table. There are some exceptions: In some cases, someone will organize a social game at the club where the goal is teaching or some such. In this case, you often have a relaxed rule set.

In contrast, many tables on BBO are extremely informal.
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#16 User is offline   sceptic 

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Posted 2006-November-12, 19:26

Quote

My partner and I have a long relay auction bidding every suit along the way (but neither opponent doubling). South is about to declare and before East's final pass he asks about one particular suit bid (note they were all artificial). Gets his explanation and then passes. West leads that suit.


1/ call TD and tell them they are cheating

2/ r u sure that would not be their lead anyway with thier card holding

3/ how long have they been playing the game and if they are good players ban them

4/ if they are novices TD explains the rules to them

5/ take up my suggestion for basic training and exams that way TD can ban someone from playing for these infractions or give them a yellow card, 4 yellow cards a year and they are banned for 12 months or fined and then more people will try and get it right

6/ ignore it
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#17 User is offline   sceptic 

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Posted 2006-November-12, 19:28

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In contrast, many tables on BBO are extremely informal.
yes, there are socres, but no one in their right mind takes them seriously


Do you not think this is how some people perceive club games ? they are hardly a matter of life or death
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#18 User is offline   sceptic 

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Posted 2006-November-12, 19:33

A general question for all of you

someone phones up your local bridge club, "hi I want to learn to play bridge in a friendly environment"

what do you think they are told

1/. Sorry we only play competitive bridge, find another club

2/. Yes come along we are a social bridge club

3/ Yes come along we are a social bridge club but you have to obey the rules or some of our members will moan and complain if ytou do something they dont like

4/ monday is social and for lower standards, tuesday is for competitive bridge and friday nights is for experts only

5/. a different answer of you r own chosing
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#19 User is offline   Echognome 

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Posted 2006-November-12, 21:55

I think you made an important point here on your last post Wayne. In our club, we certainly have different nights for different level players. We have a "no fear" night which happens to be Monday night for our beginners. (It is also when most of the experts are playing their league matches.) I think that 99% if not all of the people that play on a Monday play simple system. I would even be all for restricting conventions on a Monday night to be level 2 (only basic Acol allowed). That way people can learn the basics about playing at a club and not have to face anything unusual.

However, I also find that some of these beginners want to learn something other than Acol. So how can they develop their game if they are only playing in the restricted convention game? So their should be an intermediate/advanced night for those that wish to go further. And indeed we have a couple other nights where there are some mixed ability. Finally we have a couple nights for those where we allow pretty much any convention. (In our club this includes things even up to HUM, although no one I know plays them.) This is actually quite attractive to the expert players as they can practice whatever they want to practice.

My main problem is that I don't believe that many of these players are taught proper ethics. Indeed, it is the feeling of many that some of those that teach the beginners in our club have some of the worst ethics themselves. Now that is a shame. I help out at the university bridge club and we have a wide range of abilities. It is an extremely friendly and social club and people seem to get along playing a wide range of systems. The students are of course eager to learn new things and when any of these ethical issues arise, we simply explain to them certain etiquettes about the game.

For example we tell them not to ask any questions about the auction unless they are thinking about bidding and the answer affects whether they will bid or not. We tell them that if they want to know about the meaning of an auction, to ask about the whole auction, not just specific bids. (Players are usually quite happy to answer at the end of an auction.)

As for the change in alerting rules in the EBU, I believe that they have actually made things much easier. Sure some of the alerting may seem silly, but the rules are very simple. I can explain them to the students in a few minutes. So I don't buy that this is a problem area. I just think the teachers of the game have a responsibility to tell their students more than just how to bid, declare, and defend, but also how to alert, how to handle opponents unexpected systems, and some of the proper etiquette of the game. To me that would cut down on a lot of the conflict in the club.
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#20 User is offline   matmat 

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Posted 2006-November-13, 00:55

matt has mentioned quite a useful point here -- university clubs tend to be much more friendly and social than any of the organized bridge that i have seen. If there is one in your area and they allow non-university people to participate, try playing there once or twice and see what you think. Many of them are not sanctioned by whatever local bridge organization does the sanctioning, so there are no master points to be won which may contribute to the much friendlier atmosphere.
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